Oil does not come from dinosaurs.

Phytoplankton (image from NASA).

There’s a nice article in the New York Times on the fact that oil, petroleum, did not come form dead dinosaurs, but rather from the microscopic plankton that died and fell to the ocean floor.

The idea that oil came from the terrible lizards that children love to learn about endured for many decades. The Sinclair Oil Company featured a dinosaur in its logo and in its advertisements, and outfitted its gas stations with giant replicas that bore long necks and tails. The publicity gave the term “fossil fuels” new resonance. – Broad, 2010

It’s easy to forget how pervasive is the idea that oil comes from dinosaurs. Broad’s article is a nice reminder that:

Today, a principal tenet of geology is that a vast majority of the world’s oil arose not from lumbering beasts on land but tiny organisms at sea. It holds that blizzards of microscopic life fell into the sunless depths over the ages, producing thick sediments that the planet’s inner heat eventually cooked into oil. It is estimated that 95 percent or more of global oil traces its genesis to the sea. – Broad, 2010

How do we know?

[I]n the 1930s. Alfred E. Treibs, a German chemist, discovered that oil harbored the fossil remains of chlorophyll, the compound in plants that helps convert sunlight into chemical energy. The source appeared to be the tiny plants of ancient seas. – Broad, 2010

Phytoplankton bloom off the Carolina coast. (Image from NASA).

We tend to find a lot of oil in the deltas of the great rivers because the rivers provide nutrients for the microorganisms to survive and layers of sand and clay sediments that trap the oil and natural when they’re produced.

The article also ties the location of oil production to the geography of plate tectonics.

[W]hen Africa and South America slowly pulled apart in the Cretaceous period, forming the narrow beginnings of the South Atlantic. Big rivers poured in nutrients. A biological frenzy on the western shores of the narrow ocean ended up forming the vast oil fields now being discovered and developed off Brazil in deep water. – Broad, 2010

Went fishing

We went fishing yesterday and one of us caught our first fish. I tend to dislike dissection for dissection’s sake, at least with middle schoolers, but I believe that cleaning fish is a practical life exercise everyone should have that accomplishes the same thing. There is also an ethical dimension for anyone who eats meat. I have no opposition to cleaning anything else if we’re willing to eat it.

So we’ll probably be cooking fish this year. There aren’t many places to purchase whole fish in Memphis so we’ll probably end up doing it during our immersions. An article on the ethics of vegetarianism might also make a good basis for a Socratic dialogue.